Almost the same. Trite means I've heard it before, "hasn't everybody?". Bromide has the same meaning, but it increasingly has the added connotation of a commonplace expression, devoid of emotional content, said to calm someone's grief or distress.
Bromide.
Tin (II) Bromide.
magnesium bromide hexahydrate
Lithium Bromine
A trite statement is called a bromide.
Trite means a remark that is overused or lacks originality. A trite statement can be called a bromide or cliché.
A trite statement is called a bromide. Bromide is defined as a phrase that has been used excessively and is insincere and not original. Trite statements are also called cliches.
A. bromide. 100% sure.
A hackneyed statement or notion.
Almost the same. Trite means I've heard it before, "hasn't everybody?". Bromide has the same meaning, but it increasingly has the added connotation of a commonplace expression, devoid of emotional content, said to calm someone's grief or distress.
A hackneyed statement, banality, bromide, commonplace or triviality.
Lacking originality. Overused.
Potassium bromide has ionic bonding, and iodine bromide has covalent bonding.
I'm not sure myself, but here's my guess: Everyone considered him a bromide during class. Remember, bromide is also a salt of some sort in chemistry. And it also means "a person who is platitudinous and boring" or "a platitude or trite saying". These definitions are from Dictionary.com. Also try yourdictionary.com. They have many example sentences.
"The definition of a cliche is a trite, overused expression.""The commencement address was trite and endlessly long.""It is by vivacity and wit that man shines in company; but trite jokes and loud laughter reduce him to a buffoon." (Lord Chesterfield)"It takes one to know one" is a trite expression.It is trite to say "time heals all wounds".
Bromide.